Tamerlan Tsarnaev's body rejected for burial in Cambridge

Steven Senne / Associated Press

Ruslan Tsarni, uncle of slain Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, told reporters his nephew should be buried in Cambridge. City officials have said they would reject a burial permit application. At left is Peter Stefan of the Graham, Putnam & Mahoney Funeral Parlors in Worcestor, Mass.

Ruslan Tsarni, uncle of slain Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, told reporters his nephew should be buried in Cambridge. City officials have said they would reject a burial permit application. At left is Peter Stefan of the Graham, Putnam & Mahoney Funeral Parlors in Worcestor, Mass. (Steven Senne / Associated Press)

One of the Boston Marathon bombing suspects has been dead more than two weeks after a dramatic showdown with police in Watertown, Mass., on April 19.

But officials and his family still don't know where Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen who turned to conservative Islam, will be buried.

On Sunday, city officials in Cambridge, Tsarnaev's home in the United States, announced that the city's cemetery would reject his body for burial after other local cemeteries also said they did not want the remains.

"The difficult and stressful efforts of the citizens of the city of Cambridge to return to a peaceful life would be adversely impacted by the turmoil, protests, and widespread media presence at such an interment," Cambridge city manager Bob Healy said in a statement provided to the Los Angeles Times. "The families of loved ones interred in the Cambridge Cemetery also deserve to have their deceased family members rest in peace."

Three people were killed and more than 260 injured in the April 15 Boston bombings.

America has not taken easily to burying its least-popular criminals. In the years after Sept. 11, 2001, the plane hijackers' remains -- at least the ones that could be identified -- languished in undisclosed locations after nobody claimed them.

In 1997, Congress passed a law tailored to prevent Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, a veteran, from being buried in Arlington National Cemetery. McVeigh was executed for the 1995 bombing that left 168 dead, including 19 children younger than 6.

Tsarnaev, allegedly the author of one of the most significant terrorist attacks on U.S. soil since Sept. 11, is similarly unwanted. His widow, Katherine Russell, declined to claim his body. His parents, in Russia and skeptical of their sons' involvement in the attacks, have expressed apprehension at returning to the U.S. to deal with his death and the prosecution of his brother Dzhokhar, 19.

That left an uncle, Ruslan Tsarni of Maryland, to handle the Muslim burial rites for Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26. After the brothers were identified as bombing suspects, Tsarni called the two "losers" and said their conduct brought shame to all Chechens.

"Tamerlan Tsarnaev has no other place to be buried," Tsarni said. “A dead person needs to be buried. That’s what tradition requires, that’s what religion requires, and I guess that’s what morals require. … He was a person; now he is a deceased. … I’m left alone to deal with this matter.”

As of Sunday evening, per Islamic custom, Tsarnaev's body had been washed and shrouded in sheets, according to local media. But where his body goes next is not clear.

Cambridge city manager Healy said that he had not yet received a burial permit application from the funeral home but that he would reject it, alluding to language in a state law that expresses a city manager's "duty ... to act as chief conservator of the peace within the city."

"It is not in the best interest of 'peace within the city' to execute a cemetery deed for a plot within the Cambridge Cemetery for the body of Tamerlan Tsarnaev," Healy said in a statement.

"This entire investigation has been conducted admirably by multiple law enforcement agencies," Healy continued. "The Federal Bureau of Investigation had had the lead jurisdiction, and now, other federal agencies should take the lead in the burial of this individual."

The FBI received the remains of the Sept. 11 hijackers who crashed planes into the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania.

FBI spokeswoman Katherine Gulotta told the Los Angeles Times on Sunday night, "To my knowledge, the FBI does not have a role in this, and I believe funeral regulation is a state issue."

[Updated, 8:42 p.m. May 5: This post has been updated to include a quote from Gulotta.]